NotUrsula
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2002
- Messages
- 20,128
Just a comment on the whole business of dropping everything to take a child out of a store. I learned VERY quickly that doing that made DS worse because that was exactly what he wanted -- he hated being in stores, and realized that tantruming would get him out of them.
Mostly I just stopped taking him with me into stores until he got old enough to be patient with the experience, but in situations where I had no choice, I started making him do "corner-time-outs" *in* the store, thereby prolonging his "agony" and denying him the exit that he was bucking for. I'd find a nice blank wall or pillar, and make him stand there facing it until he calmed down. Once we ended up standing there for over an hour, because he kept making snide remarks every time I finally let him away from the wall. I just pointed out that we were going to stay in the store until I finished getting the groceries, and that if that took forever he had only himself to blame. It took a while, but he finally got the point.
I had a friend whose child used to deliberately misbehave to get out of restaurants, and of course she fell for it and took her out. It only stopped when she realized that the solution was to make her do a public time-out *in* the restaurant (usually in the restroom), and refuse to leave until everyone else in the family had eaten.
Mind you, I don't advocate letting a child audibly scream in a public place, but for this particular problem *not* leaving may work better if you can effectively keep the noise down.
Mostly I just stopped taking him with me into stores until he got old enough to be patient with the experience, but in situations where I had no choice, I started making him do "corner-time-outs" *in* the store, thereby prolonging his "agony" and denying him the exit that he was bucking for. I'd find a nice blank wall or pillar, and make him stand there facing it until he calmed down. Once we ended up standing there for over an hour, because he kept making snide remarks every time I finally let him away from the wall. I just pointed out that we were going to stay in the store until I finished getting the groceries, and that if that took forever he had only himself to blame. It took a while, but he finally got the point.
I had a friend whose child used to deliberately misbehave to get out of restaurants, and of course she fell for it and took her out. It only stopped when she realized that the solution was to make her do a public time-out *in* the restaurant (usually in the restroom), and refuse to leave until everyone else in the family had eaten.
Mind you, I don't advocate letting a child audibly scream in a public place, but for this particular problem *not* leaving may work better if you can effectively keep the noise down.
